| Situation Update No. 3 Ref.no.: FF-20100101-24376-KEN
Situation Update No. 3 On 2010-01-06 at 16:40:51 [UTC] Event: Flash Flood Location: Kenya State of Rift Valley River Kilimo Naivasha Number of Deads: 30 person(s) Number of Missing: 60 person(s) Situation: Some 30,000 people are in urgent need of shelter, water, food and healthcare after heavy rainfall caused massive flooding, forcing thousands to leave their homes, according to the Kenya Red Cross Society (KRCS). Roads and bridges have been either destroyed or severely damaged, cutting off villagers and leaving them without food or potable water, putting them at risk of cholera and other waterborne diseases. The KRCS has begun trucking non-food items to Turkana and Nakuru in the northwest, where about 30,000 people have been affected in the past few days. The consignment includes blankets, jerry cans, mosquito nets, kitchen sets, soap and water treatment tablets. These types of emergency activities are very expensive, said Abbas Gullet, KRCS Secretary-General. So far, the search and rescue activities have cost KRCS about KSh30 million (US$400,000), an amount sufficient to respond to the current needs but not if prolonged rains cause future damage, he added. The organization has appealed for more funds to respond to the needs of the affected population in areas at high risk of cholera and other waterborne diseases. "This has the potential of becoming an environmental disaster. We managed to address the immediate needs, but we need support to help our brothers and sisters," Gullet told IRIN. "In some areas roads were completely washed away, impacting on search and rescue activities as well as the assessments to provide final figures of affected people and the number of deaths - which for now is recorded at 21 people," Colonel Joseph Kinwori of the National Disaster Operation Centre (NDOC) told IRIN. According to NDOC, the area most badly affected by the floods is the North Rift Valley region. In one district, Turkana East, five people died, five bridges were destroyed, many farms and households were damaged, while hundreds of head of livestock perished. Megan Gilgan, the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) chief of emergency, told IRIN: "We are concerned about recurrences of watery diarrhoea and cholera in Lokori, East Turkana. The area already faced an unprecedented outbreak in the month of December and the situation could worsen now. We have emergency health kits available and water purification tablets for 30,000 people, enough supplies for a month." |